Friday, June 10, 2011

The County, Chapter 2, Part 2 of 2

                                                                   
                                           The Doodenville Men's Club 
                                                                   

They don’t talk about who has the best dog in town anymore.  No sir, not since last December.
It was the middle of December and cold, gosh it was cold, and snow, I mean you couldn’t see from the window of Jessie Miller’s General Store to the street side of the wooden planks that make up our sidewalks here in Doodenville.  Everybody’s always said that it was the worse snow storm ever to have hit these parts.
Even though it was plumb miserable out, we all showed up about the same time we always showed up at Jessie’s place.  We had what you might consider a men’s club.  We didn’t call it that, but every Saturday about sundown, or perhaps a little later, Steve Branson, Digger Johnson, Judge Johns and myself would get together and play checkers, tell stories, and more or less just brag to one another - which some might say was stretching the truth.
This one December evening, the bragging turned to our dogs.  No man in Doodenville went anywhere without his dog.  A man is judged somewhat on what kind of dog he has and how he treats it and it him.  Now everyone cannot see how one is treating his dog all the time nor he him so we felt like it was our duty that night to tell one another.  That is where the others always get into trouble because they exaggerate a mite and this night they exaggerated a lot.  Not me, of course.
The checkers match had gotten over and we began to sip a little of the stuff behind the counter that Jessie kept for snake bite.  Jessie was always there but he seldom joined in because he was too busy keeping track of how much we were sipping and eating from the cracker barrel.  Anyway, we were doing what we always did when Steve Branson popped up and said during a lull in the conversation, “Now we have been talking about our dogs for nigh onto three hours and Lord knows how many nights we have been doing the same.  Let’s settle who has the best dog once and for all”.
Everybody seemed to think it was a pretty good idea because each man thought he had the best dog and would win any type of such a contest.  We all thought a little and tried to come up with some sort of criteria that could determine who had the best dog.
Steven Branson suggested that we could have them run a race but that idea was scuttled because there was too much snow on the ground and too cold.  “And besides,” Digger Johnson said, “being fast don’t mean nothing anyway”.
He was right, of course.  We all knew that Crazy Jimmy Twofoot’s oldest boy, Jimmy J., was the fastest thing on two legs in three counties and the boy couldn’t find his way to the outhouse without someone helping him.  At least that is what Crazy Jimmy always said.
Then Steve came up with another idea (he was always coming up with ideas, being an engineer and all.)  He suggested that we have the dogs bark real loud and whose ever dog barked the longest and loudest would be declared the winner. (I didn’t say all his ideas were good, though.)
That idea was ignored because everyone knew that Jessie’s wife was sick with the virus and noise would wake her and cause some discomfort.  Steve must have gotten the point also because he snapped his fingers like something had just occurred to him and mumbled, “oh, yeah!” and sat back down.  It seemed as though in all the years that I had known Steve he was always snapping is finger about something.
We all sat around the stove and thought some more.  Then Judge Johns cleared his throat.  Now when a man clears his throat, those in hearing distance don’t pay much attention, but when Judge Johns cleared his throat you knew he had something important to say.  He was also real smart so naturally we all started paying close attention.
“It seems to me,” he began, “that we want to find out which one of us has the smartest dog.  The smartest dog, gents, not the fastest nor the loudest, but the smartest.  Intelligence, friends, is the true test of greatness”.  Judge Johns could always be counted on to get right to the heart of the matter.  “So it seems to me,” he continued after grasping his lapels and clearing his throat again, “that each dog ought to be judged on his reaction to a single command and whose dog reacts in the most intelligent manner will be considered the best dog in Doodenville”.
We all thought about that for a while and by and by it seemed fair enough.  But then Digger said, “You know each man here might think that his dog done the best no matter what the other three dogs did.  If that happened, we would all be in a stalemate and be right back where we were.”
That sounded kind of correct.  We knew we were all men of integrity, but we also knew each other and understood how sometimes a man’s judgment could get clouded in important matters like this one.
“Well,” Judge Johns said after he cleared his throat, “it seems to me we need an unbiased judge”.  You know, to this day, I get plumb amazed on how the Judge could always grasp things and have a solution so quickly.
The natural judge, of course, was Jessie.  I say ‘of course’ because Jessie didn’t have a dog.  At least not since last spring when Old Clem Thurman’s horses kicked Jessie’s dog Cracker in the head.
Jessie agreed to act as the judge and took charge right away.  “Since there are four of you,” while grasping his suspenders, “one of you will have to go first and one will have to go last, and two of you will have to go in the middle, one ahead of the other”.
I sat there and blinked because he had lost me at first.  I did not think that was possible because we always thought Jessie was a mite slow.  He continued: “So it seems to me we ought to go by age, starting with the youngest man.  I will give you all five minutes to decide what you want your dogs to do”.  He fixed his one good eye on the clock that hung over the Buster Brown sign that hung behind the counter.
After about three minutes and seventeen seconds I could tell everyone was done figuring what their dog was going to do.  Steve snapped his fingers and smiled, Digger slapped his knee with both hands, and Judge Johns clutched his lapels and got that paternal courtroom smile on his face, next to clearing his throat he was famous for.  I had known right off what I was going to do.  “Times up! You first, Branson, you are the youngest.”
Steve sprang to his feet, snapped his fingers and said. “Bridge, get that dollar bill off Jessie’s ceiling.”  Jessie had nailed a dollar bill to his ceiling years back because he said it was the first dollar he had ever made.
After hearing his master’s command, Bridge got up, shook himself off, took hold of an empty chair with his teeth and pulled it over to the potbellied stove.  Then he looked at the dollar bill, back to the chair then moved it a little towards the counter.  He did this procedure about three or four times.
Then before any of us, except Steve, knew what was happening, Bridge ran to the door of the store, opened it and ran outside.  We could not tell how far he went because of all the blowing snow.  It must not have been too far because all of a sudden he came racing into the room, leaped on the chair and bounced at least ten feet to the ceiling, snatched the greenback with his teeth and did a perfect three point landing.  I say three point because his left front leg kind of cracked like a stick.  He was a mighty brave dog though because he didn’t even let out a whimper.  Steve claimed later that it was because of Bridge’s sensitivity to Jessie’s wife’s virus.
We all agreed that it was a mighty fine trick.  Jessie pursed his lips and made a mark on a piece of paper.  We all chuckled beneath our breath because we knew he couldn’t write a lick, but he was a good counter because he ways seemed to know how many crackers we had taken from the cracker barrel every Saturday night.
“Homer.”  I was next.  “Lock,” I began, “Go down to the jail and let Samuel Horn out and bring him here.”  Now, Lock had unlocked that jailhouse door I bet a hundred times.  I was always sort of afraid of getting myself locked in a jail cell accidentally, so I had taught Lock how to do it.  I also knew that Lock knew who Samuel Horn was because he was our best customer.  Lock laid there by the potbellied stove and did not move.  That did not concern me because I figured Lock was just stretching internally or something.  Pretty soon however it became apparent to me and everyone else that Lock wasn’t going to do anything except move a little closer to the stove.  I felt panic creep up in my throat and started to give the command again, when Jessie, with his thumbs around his suspenders said very authoritatively, “Only one command, Homer!
We all sat there in silence for about another minute and thirty-seven seconds waiting for Lock to get busy.  But ole Lock just laid there staring at the big iron stove and twitching his right hind leg occasionally.
I wanted to crawl under a chair.  Everyone was stifling a smile except Steve who was laughing his fool head off and of course Jessie who was keeping a Judge,s face.  I could really feel the blood boil and wanted to lash out and strike someone, preferably Steve.  But after a certain age you just don’t go around and do stuff like that.  So, I just sat there with all the humiliation and degradation of the world weighing me down.
“Your turn, Digger”.  Jessie said abruptly since Digger was the next oldest or third youngest, depending on how you looked at it.  Digger sat there for a few seconds, slapped one knee with both hands and stood up.  “Spade,” (Digger was the assistant to the local undertaker) “go outside and dig me a hole six feet by three feet and six inches deep.”
Spade proceeded to do just that after he opened the door with his front paws and closed it with his hind ones.  Showoff, I thought.
We all watched through the window as Spade in the freezing weather began his dig.  We couldn’t see him real good though because of the blowing snow.  Digger claimed it was because he was moving so fast.
After about fifteen minuets, Spade came back in the store the same way he went out but in reverse.  You could really tell Spade had been outside.  One eyelid was frozen shut and he was shivering like mad from the top of his head to the tip of his tail plus there was frozen mucus hanging from his nose.
Before we knew what was happening Jessie was outside with a tape measure measuring the hole Spade had just dug.  When Jessie came back in he was shaking almost as much as Spade.  “If I got to make a decision,” he chattered, “I got to know all the facts, right Judge?”  The Judge did his paternal smile and nodded in agreement.
I was still feeling humiliated and had lost interest in the whole contest.  No one was smiling or laughing at me anymore, but they didn’t have to.
“Judge!”
“Yes, your honor.”   The Judge took a plug of tobacco from his vest pocket and took a big chaw.  He just sat there for about one minute, chawing, smiling, and hanging on his lapels.  Then without a word of any kind he tilted his head back and spat, in what Steve later figured was a forty-seven degree angle.
No more had the wad passed the Judge’s front two silver teeth, when his dog, Bailiff, jumped to his feet and ran for the spittoon Jessie kept at the end of the counter.  Bailiff grabbed the brass bucket with his teeth and raced in the direction the wad was traveling and I’ll be darned if he didn’t jump four feet in the air catch the hulk on the fly right in the spittoon, landed not spilling drop, and walked sort of nonchalantly, and perhaps a little arrogantly back to where the spittoon was supposed to be and sat it down.
Jessie studied each dog, even mine which I appreciated, took a look at his “notes” and began.  “Gentleman, after careful consideration and given the parameter of the charge given me I must conclude that that the most intelligent dog here tonight and therefore the best dog in Doodenville is….”  He paused for the effect , then after clearing his throat and grasping his suspenders he continued, … “is Lock” and he slapped his hand on the counter.
“Lock!”  We all shouted.  I almost fell out of my chair.  Digger did fall out of his because when he went to slap his knees he missed and fell on the floor.  Branson started using powerful language and the Judge turned green, then red, then green again because he was half way choking on what was left of his chaw.
Everyone in the room, except the Judge who was busy turning colors, demanded to know the reason for Jessie’s verdict.
“Steven Branson.”  Jessie began.  “That was a mighty fine trick but look at Bridge's leg.  It is going to take a good three weeks or so before it heals up and maybe not then, and Digger, Spade is shaking so much he will probably come down with pneumonia or something, and Judge you let Bailiff there put the most disgusting thing one could ever imagine in his mouth, no telling what he will come down with.  Now the three of you made one command that, I admit made for some powerful good tricks, but by doing so the dogs did not act very bright or intelligently.
“Now I want you boys to look outside.  It must be eighteen degrees out there and the wind’s a blowing a powerful lot.  Now who in his right mind is going to go out there unless they had to.  Yes sir, Lock is the best, the smartest, and most intelligent dog in Doodenville.”  And with the word Doodenville, Jessie brought the flat of his hand back down on the counter again.
I then said to Jessie so everyone could hear, “Your honor, give me a can of those dog biscuits and put a few more coals on the fire, I don’t want a smart and valuable dog like Lock to catch a chill”.
Lock must have heard me mention his name because he opened one eye, took a deep breath, let out a pleasing sound of comfort and inched a little close to the potbellied stove.
 


Thursday, June 9, 2011

North to Alaska -one more time

Alaska

North to Alaska

Friday  May 20.

Left MCI in the late afternoon.  Stopped over in Denver to change planes and took a direct 5 hour flight to Anchorage.  Arrived Anchorage at , Anchorage time.
Took a cab to Ft. Richardson, checked into guest housing.

Saturday  May 21.

Rose early to eat in the consolidated mess hall or what they now call the Dining Facility. It was closed.  Asked at the desk where we could get something to eat and they said nothing was open until .  We called a cab to take us to the adjoining air force base, Elmendorf to catch their Dinning Facility that was supposed to be open.  The cab driver was confused on how to get there so I just told him to take us to The Captain Cook.  The Captain Cook is the premier hotel in Anchorage.  We ate breakfast and I was able to eat my first reindeer sausage in two years.
 

We started walking up and down the streets of Anchorage stopping in every souvenir shop along the way.  We ended up at a Tourist facility that provided us with a shuttle to the Alaskan Native Culture Center.  Took a two hour tour of the place.  We returned to Anchorage and sought out the one eating establishment I wanted to have lunch at, a place called Humpy’s.  We ate a Halibut sandwich.

Walked down to the farmer’s market that was held every first weekend and walked around.  Went to the Ulu Factory where Jerry bought an Ulu Knife.  Drank a beer at a local brew house.  Walked around the shops again.  Stopped by an Earthquake exhibit and watched a film about the 1964 Good Friday earthquake...  Went back to Ft. Richardson by cab.  Went to a movie, bought some hotdogs for half price that were left over and took them back to our room.  Went to sleep.

Sunday  May 22

Had coffee at a Starbucks on Ft. Richardson.  Took a cab and met the Gilliam’s and Marta Cobb for lunch at a place called Guinneys.  They were people I use to teach with at Hooper Bay.  Marta took us on a car tour of Anchorage.  Ate a pizza at the Mosses Tooth and then Marta took us back to the post.
 

Monday  May 23

Checked out of our unit and took a cab to the car rental place.  Headed towards Seward on the only highway to the Kenai along Turnagain Arm.  Stopped along the high way once at Beluga Point and Bird Point to take some pictures.  Arrived in Seward and checked into the Department of Defense run vacation lodge.  Ate dinner that night in a restaurant over looking the harbor.  We walked around Exit Glacier for an hour or so and spotted a black bear high up on a hill.
 

Tuesday  May 24

Ate breakfast in a dinner converted from an old trolley car.  Caught our boat for the Resurrection Bay tour.  Stopped on Fox Island for lunch consisting of Salmon and Prime Rib.  While on the boat we saw a few whales, otters, mountain goats, sea lions, dolphins, Puffin and all sorts of other birds. 

We drove around Seward, had a glass of wine in a joint and then ate in an Italian-Greek Restaurant. 
 

Wednesday  May 25

Started on our way back to Anchorage but stopped off at Girdwood and drove around town.  Also went into see a very up scale lodge called the Alyeska.  Continued on back to Anchorage and Ft. Richardson where we were able to get a room again.

Thursday  May 26

Drove north toward Denali National Park.  Stopped by a fellow I had met on facebook named Mac McAnally at Willow.  Mac his fiancé, mother and father made us breakfast.  We had a nice visit.  He gave us some smoked Hooligan, which I tried but did not like.  Mac also kept a .45 on the table to take with him went he went out side in case he ran across any bears.  He was building a cabin along a river and the place was kind of remote.

We continued on to Talkeetna walked around town.  Saw Mt McKinley and headed back towards Anchorage.
 

Friday  May 27

Drove town to Girdwood again but stopped by a BBQ place over looking Turnagain Arm and drank a couple of beers.  Ate dinner at a place called the Musky Ox.
 

Saturday  May 28

Went to the Anchorage Museum and a movie that night on the post.

Sunday  May 29

Drove to Palmer and Wasilla and saw part of Pailins house.  Took Marta to dinner that night.  Walked around Cook Inlet near down town Anchorage.  Went to Flat Top where you cold see all of Cook Inlet, Turnagain Arm, and Anchorage.  Also went to the Anchorage Zoo and saw all the animals indigenousness to Alaska.

Monday  May 30

Drove around town, had a deer hotdog from a street vendor, bought a couple of things, headed towards the airport, turned in the car, hung around the military lounge until our flight left late that night.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The County, Chapter 2, part 1 of 2

                                                                    Chapter 2
                                                       The Doodenville Men's Club 
                                                                   (part 1 of 2)

P.T. Sanders
Editor, Atlantic Monthly

Dear Mr. Storebeck,

We enjoyed reading your story about the men’s club you have there in Doodenville, however at the present time it does not fit our editorial needs.

Thank you for your interest in the Atlantic Monthly and feel free to send other submissions.  We will file this story and others you might submit in our Pull Pending Historical File and if perhaps someday, we will publish them.  We will contact you by letter, however, prior to publication.

Yours Truly,

P.T. Sanders


Final Draft of “The Doodenville Men’s Club” as submitted:


They don’t talk about who has the best dog in town anymore.  No sir, not since last December.
It was the middle of December and cold, gosh it was cold, and snow, I mean you couldn’t see from the window of Jessie Miller’s General Store to the street side of the wooden planks that make up our sidewalks here in Doodenville.  Everybody’s always said that it was the worse snow storm ever to have hit these parts.
Even though it was plumb miserable out, we all showed up about the same time we always showed up at Jessie’s place.  We had what you might consider a men’s club.  We didn’t call it that, but every Saturday about sundown, or perhaps a little later, Steve Branson, Digger Johnson, Judge Johns and myself would get together and play checkers, tell stories, and more or less just brag to one another - which some might say was stretching the truth.
This one December evening, the bragging turned to our dogs.  No man in Doodenville went anywhere without his dog.  A man is judged somewhat on what kind of dog he has and how he treats it and it him.  Now everyone cannot see how one is treating his dog all the time nor he him so we felt like it was out duty that night to tell one another.  That is where the others always get into trouble because they exaggerate a mite and this night they exaggerated a lot.  Not me, of course.
The checkers match had gotten over and we began to sip a little of the stuff behind the counter that Jessie kept for snake bite.  Jessie was always there but he seldom joined in because he was too busy keeping track of how much we were sipping and eating from the cracker barrel.  Anyway, we were doing what we always did when Steve Branson popped up and said during a lull in the conversation, “Now we have been talking about our dogs for nigh onto three hours and Lord knows how many nights we have been doing the same.  Let’s settle who has the best dog once and for all”.
Everybody seemed to think it was a pretty good idea because each man thought he had the best dog and would win any type of such a contest.  We all thought a little and tried to come up with some sort of criteria that could determine who had the best dog.
Steven Branson suggested that we could have them run a race but that idea was scuttled because there was too much snow on the ground and too cold.  “And besides,” Digger Johnson said, “being fast don’t mean nothing anyway”.
He was right, of course.  We all knew that Crazy Jimmy Twofoot’s oldest boy, Jimmy J., was the fastest thing on two legs in three counties and the boy couldn’t find his way to the outhouse without someone helping him.  At least that is what Crazy Jimmy always said.
Then Steve came up with another idea (he was always coming up with ideas, being an engineer and all.)  He suggested that we have the dogs bark real loud and whose ever dog barked the longest and loudest would be declared the winner. (I didn’t say all his ideas were good, though.)
That idea was ignored because everyone knew that Jessie’s wife was sick with the virus and noise would wake her and cause some discomfort.  Steve must have gotten the point also because he snapped his fingers like something had just occurred to him and mumbled, “oh, yeah!” and sat back down.  It seemed as though in all the years that I had known Steve he was always snapping is finger about something.
We all sat around the stove and thought some more.  Then Judge Johns cleared his throat.  Now when a man clears his throat, those in hearing distance don’t pay much attention, but when Judge Johns cleared his throat you knew he had something important to say.  He was also real smart so naturally we all started paying close attention.
“It seems to me,” he began, “that we want to find out which one of us has the smartest dog.  The smartest dog, gents, not the fastest nor the loudest, but the smartest.  Intelligence, friends, is the true test of greatness”.  Judge Johns could always be counted on to get right to the heart of the matter.  “So it seems to me,” he continued after grasping his lapels and clearing his throat again, “that each dog ought to be judged on his reaction to a single command and whose dog reacts in the most intelligent manner will be considered the best dog in Doodenville”.
We all thought about that for a while and by and by it seemed fair enough.  But then Digger said, “You know each man here might think that his dog done the best no matter what the other three dogs did.  If that happened, we would all be in a stalemate and be right back where we were.”
That sounded kind of correct.  We knew we were all men of integrity, but we also knew each other and understood how sometimes a man’s judgment could get clouded in important matter like this one.
“Well,” Judge Johns said after he cleared his throat, “it seems to me we need an unbiased judge”.  You know, to this day, I get plumb amazed on how the Judge could always grasp things and have a solution so quickly.
The natural judge, of course, was Jessie.  I say ‘of course’ because Jessie didn’t have a dog.  At least not since last spring when Old Clem Thurman’s horses kicked Jessie’s dog Cracker in the head.
Jessie agreed to act as the judge and took charge right away.  “Since there are four of you,” while grasping his suspenders, “one of you will have to go first and one will have to go last, and two of you will have to go in the middle, one ahead of the other”.
I sat there and blinked because he had lost me at first.  I did not think that was possible because we always thought Jessie was a mite slow.  He continued: “So it seems to me we ought to go by age, starting with the youngest man.  I will give you all five minutes to decide what you want your dogs to do”.  He fixed his one good eye on the clock that hung over the Buster Brown sign that hung behind the counter.
After about three minutes and seventeen seconds I could tell everyone was done figuring what their dog was going to do.  Steve snapped his fingers and smiled, Digger slapped his knee with both hands, and Judge Johns clutched his lapels and got that paternal courtroom smile on his face.  Next to clearing his throat he was famous for that.  I had known right off what I was going to do.  “Times up! You first, Branson, you are the youngest.”
....to be continued

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

North to Alaska (again)

We flew into Anchorage and spent the first two days there before renting a car and heading out to the countryside.  One of the perqs of being retired officers is we were able to stay in “Distinguished Visitor Lodging” at Fort Richardson in Anchorage and later on at the Seward Military Resort down south.  We had to pay, of course, but at a much lower rate than at commercial establishments.  At Richardson, we even ate in the Army mess halls.  Been a long . since I got to do that.


In Anchorage, we met up with some of Snapper’s old friends from when they were out teaching in the bush a few years ago and went up to Flattop Mountain which overlooks Anchorage and the Cook Inlet.  Great views of the city and the Sleeping Lady Mountains across the inlet.  We went out to the Alaska Native Heritage Center and Museum, then just walked around downtown and did all the other things tourists do

.
The trip really started when we got our car and started south to Seward along the Turnagain Arm of Cook Inlet.  The story goes that when Captain Cook on the HMS Resolution was searching for the Northwest Passage in 1778, he sent his sailing master, Captain Bligh, later of the HMS Bounty, to explore the arm, thinking it was the passage.  Bligh sailed in and finally realized it wasn’t what Cook thought and had to give the order to turn around.  He sarcastically named it “Turnagain Arm” and it has stuck.  The highway runs along the Arm for quite a distance on the Kenai Peninsula before reaching  Seward. The mountains along the way are steep, the water is deep, and people are non-existent.  I hadn’t seen tides rolling in and out before, so that was neat.  Along the road, right on the water, we saw a BBQ place with the name “Turnagain Arm Pit”, so naturally we had to stop there.  Turned out, the owner was from SE Missouri.  Didn’t see another BBQ restaurant in any place we went.  Just outside of Seward, we drove up to Kenai Fjords National Park and hiked up to Exit Glacier, the end of the immense Harding Icefield.  Saw a bear, but he didn’t see us.  Saw moose droppings along the trail, but no moose.
Seward sits at the head of Resurrection Bay, a fjord on the Gulf of Alaska, and is one of the chief ports in Alaska.  Nearly every non-seafood item is shipped in to the state and comes through Seward.  Even as important as it is, the port is a shell of its former self as it was ruined by the 1964 earthquake.  I remember when that happened - it was my first day at basic training. 


We took a day trip on a small boat down the bay to Fox Island in the gulf where we had lunch at a resort and then back to Seward.  Along the way, we saw a lot of marine life and some pretty spectacular scenery.  I understand that the bay was so named after a Russian ship was caught in a storm in the Gulf of Alaska and retreated into the bay for protection, emerging into the peaceful waters on Easter Sunday.  Resurrection Bay was also where the opening scene of The Hunt for Red October was filmed.  If we had continued to sail due south from Fox Island, the next dry land we would have seen would be the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica.  

We headed north toward Denali National Park and Mount McKinley.  Along the way, we stopped in Willow where Snapper’s cousin and family lives.  I’m not sure Willow is an actual place, because we drove offroad, across creeks, through the woods, out of cell phone range, with only vague directions before finding his cabin right on the Willow River.  His family was expecting us and fixed us a big breakfast, ending with some small smoked fish of some sort he had caught and smoked the day before.  They convinced Snapper to try it, but not me.  They said eat it, bones and all.  Snapper took one bite and gave it up.  Pretty wild country and we noticed he had a loaded .45 pistol lying on the table and he doesn’t go outside without it.  Even in Anchorage, Snapper’s teaching friend said moose keep coming into her yard and eating her tulips.

From Willow, we drove to Talkeetna, a tiny village serving as the jumping off place for climbing expeditions of Denali.  At 20,320 feet high, Denali is the highest peak in North America and when measured from base to peak, taller than Mount Everest.  The weather was clear the entire time, so we had good views of Denali.  Quite a nice sight.

On the way back, we stopped in Wasilla and located Sarah Palin’s house.  Kind of isolated on Lake Lucille, but we went out on the dock, leaned out as far as we could, looked through the trees, and got a picture of her house.  Getting bolder, we found a back gravel road with No Trespassing signs and drove right to her back yard, but a high fence kept us from seeing much.  She wasn’t home anyway, being on her bus in New Hampshire.
Back in Anchorage, we spent some time at the Alaska Zoo and drove around Lake Hood, the world’s largest seaplane base, before driving down to Girdwood, an alpine-style community where the Beautiful People ski at the Alyeska Resort.  There, we ate at a must-stop restaurant called the Double Musky Inn, once owned, I think, by the late Sen. Ted Stevens.

It was a great trip and the weather was perfect - clear, warm, no rain.  The marine and wildlife were in abundance, lodging was cheap, food and gasoline expensive.  Seafood, I’m told, was excellent.  I stuck with beef.  Or was it moose?  It was bright as noon at 11:30 p.m. and not real dark until about 2:00 a.m.  Daybreak was about 4:30 a.m., so we never saw any dark sky, let alone the Northern Lights.  Glad I got to go and it was clearly a Bucket List trip. 

Enjoyed it greatly, Snapper.

Jerry Sonderegger